High-flying entertainment, Team Umizoomi & Dora’s Fantastic Flight on the Nintendo DS enables your child or little one to escape into a fantastic world filled with education, fun and simplistic story plots.

Controls on the Nintendo DS are very simple: use the joystick to move your characters and touch screen to interact with them. Language is easy for young listeners and a clever feature included is the voice command.

Children are asked to speak a word into the DS (mostly with Dora and Boots) to open doors in the game. I personally enjoyed this feature since I have been working diligently with my niece to learn both Spanish and sign language.

It wouldn’t be the perfect review if I didn’t have one of the biggest Dora fans of all time testing. I had to recruit my niece (who is 3½ years old) to play the game. For the first time in a long time, a game besides Super Mario Bros. kept her attention for three hours. She would yell out “I did it!” and giggle a lot during play.

A&E reporter John Wenzel has covered a variety of topics for The Denver Post over the years, including video games, comedy, music and the fine arts. He's been playing and loving video games since his dad brought home a sweet ColecoVision in 1983. Catch him on PSN as beardsandgum.

Hugh got his start writing for the Cheyenne and Woodmen Edition newspapers in Colorado Springs. In 2011 he moved to Denver where he has written for Denver Urban Spectrum and Colorado Community Media’s Wheat Ridge Transcript. Hugh joined The Denver Post in 2014 as an editorial assistant.

Bryan Moore joined The Denver Post sports department in 1997 and has worked in many phases of producing the daily sports section ever since, specifically focusing on coverage of the Denver Broncos, Colorado Rockies, Denver Nuggets, Colorado Avalanche, and college football and basketball.